Also what risk is 1 kid in public school if all others vaccinated?
Or all unvaccinated people to vaccinated people in general?
Surely diseases can mutate etc .... But seems like low probability event unless alot of spread.
Depends on the school because some schools do not have vaccination policy as a requirement for enrollment.
Also, you should read up on the history of diseases in the school system involving Measles, Meningitis, Chicken Pox and others. People tend to freak out more when their children become sick versus adults becoming sick.
Most schools have vaccination requirements for such but Covid-19 has
not reached that level. You need a lot of kids to die or develop serious side effects from a disease before they make it a required vaccination.
Yet, Covid-19 is different from other diseases...kids / teenagers / young adults are
excellent carriers for the spread that can then harm their teachers, school employees, parents, grandparents
or other children with an underlying medical condition.
More kids today than ever before going to school with underlying medical conditions...overweight, diabetic, heart problems, respiratory problems and so on. Thus, diseases introduced in the school system today is very problematic.
Today, with the ease of global travel...people can spread diseases more easily from country to country. In fact, its very common when a country has an outbreak...neighbouring countries will shut their borders to the infected country.
It's not just an issue about 1 kid. There are communities within countries that are highly susceptible to disease and they don't have the resources to protect themselves from the disease.
In fact, when you learn a little about the history of diseases...it was used very successfully to gain land from indigenous people of the land via introduction of the disease via inputting just 1 child / 1 soldier / 1 person into that community while those that want the land are essentially immune.
wrbtrader